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Home»News»An 8-bit quality surprise on Samsung’s Galaxy S26 Ultra has stumped me
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An 8-bit quality surprise on Samsung’s Galaxy S26 Ultra has stumped me

News RoomBy News Room4 March 20264 Mins Read
An 8-bit quality surprise on Samsung’s Galaxy S26 Ultra has stumped me
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I’m going to be blunt: this shouldn’t have happened. For weeks, the assumption, actually, the understanding, was that the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra shipped with a 10-bit display. That’s not some luxury extra in 2026 for an “Ultra” flagship; it’s a baseline expectation. And yes, even Samsung’s messaging leaned in that direction. Reviewers believed it. Customers believed it. Only after mounting pressure from the community did Samsung finally confirm the panel is, in fact, 8-bit.

How can Samsung be so bad at everything related to launching a smartphone after all these years? We were told numerous times in San Francisco the S26 series all have 10 bit color depth and now they’re changing their tune a week later? That not only is awful for media reporting…

— Jeff Springer (@jspring86az) March 3, 2026

And that timing? It matters. This wasn’t a clearly spelled-out spec from day one. The clarification came after users dug through documentation, ran side-by-side comparisons, and started asking uncomfortable questions.

Just received confirmation from Samsung – S26 Ultra has an 8 bit display, not a 10 bit display as we were originally told.

That means it can only display 16 million colours instead of 1 billion, and just uses tech designed to “simulate 10 bit”.

Not a problem that’s easy to… pic.twitter.com/q6dU93B7NC

— Arun Maini (@Mrwhosetheboss) March 3, 2026

Only then did Samsung confirm the S26 Ultra supports 16.7 million colours, not the 1.07 billion you’d expect from a native 10-bit panel. That’s not a rounding error. That’s a full tier difference.

An ultra name, a very non-ultra compromise

Here’s where it gets frustrating. In the little time I had with the phone, I tested it next to devices with true 10-bit panels, including the OnePlus 15. And no, the difference isn’t theoretical or “only visible to pros.” On HDR content, gradient banding is noticeable. Skies don’t fade as smoothly. Darker transitions feel harsher. Even outside HDR, when you look closely, the panel just doesn’t feel as refined. Fine text and details don’t pop the same way, and colour shifts aren’t as fluid.

Samsung’s justification circles back to its new Privacy Display tech, which narrows viewing angles to block shoulder surfers. And to be fair, that’s clever engineering. It genuinely works. But here’s the catch: privacy screen protectors have existed forever. And I’d argue that for the vast majority of buyers, a brighter, more vibrant display with true color fidelity would have been a far better trade-off. You can slap on a tempered privacy protector if you really want shielding, but no add-on can magically turn an 8-bit panel into a true 10-bit one later. Once it’s 8-bit, it’s 8-bit. And that stings even more when the company in question literally builds some of the best display panels on the planet.

It’s a big deal for a high price tag

What makes this harder to swallow is how Samsung often gets away with moves like this in the U.S., where flagship competition is limited. Zoom out globally and look at what Xiaomi 17 Ultra is delivering, or what vivo X300 Ultra is doing with display and imaging hardware. Those phones feel unapologetically “Ultra.” Even in the U.S., the OnePlus 15 undercuts the S26 Ultra on price while offering a proper 10-bit display. That’s not nitpicking, that’s direct value comparison.

Person holding OnePlus 15.

On the other hand, look at Samsung. It took what feels like an older display foundation, layered privacy tech on top, and framed it as innovation. On paper, the S26 Ultra still ticks the usual boxes: high brightness, LTPO refresh rate, premium materials. But colour depth isn’t a bonus spec. Instead, it’s foundational to how content looks and feels.

A Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra in a man's hand.

Add to that, the new privacy tech also means Samsung now has a new arrangement of pixels underneath. Without getting too much into the technicalities of things, let’s address the real issue of how it looks: it doesn’t look as sharp. It doesn’t look as clean. And when regular shoppers start noticing that in-store, you don’t have a spec debate anymore, you have a perception problem.

Not good and my eyes get tired really quick with S26 Ultra. I prefer S25U display – much more clear and comfortable.

Here are macro shots without Privacy mode. S26U at the bottom. S25U is on upper side. pic.twitter.com/8q7N6EGVXG

— Evgeny Makarov (@evgeny_makarov7) March 3, 2026

If this is what “Ultra” means now, maybe it’s time we start asking what that label is actually worth. And if you ask me, if is the compromise for privacy, I’d rather take my chances in public and have a better display.

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Next Article Galaxy S26 Ultra vs. iPhone 17 Pro Max: Which $1,300 flagship deserves to be in your pocket?

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